Resources for NIST's Slap Fingerprint Segmentation Evaluations
Slap Fingerprint Segmentation Evaluation (SlapSeg) is a series of public tests
of automated slap fingerprint segmentation algorithms. Fingerprint segmentation
is the act of separating or segmenting an image of the friction ridge structure
of the hand into individual images of the upper-most finger joints, known as
distal phalanges. The evaluation has been conducted by the Image Group at the
National Institute of Standards and Technology since 2004.
The current iteration of SlapSeg is SlapSeg III, which incorporates
evaluation of tenprint cards, identification flats, upper palm, and full palm
images. Previous tests include SlapSeg II (2008-2018) and SlapSeg 04
(2004-2005).
If you found a bug and can provide steps to reliably reproduce it, or if you
have a feature request, please open an issue. Other questions may be addressed
to the NIST SlapSeg team.
The SlapSeg team sends updates about the SlapSeg tests to their mailing list.
Enter your e-mail address on the mailing list site, or send a blank e-mail to
SlapSeg+subscribe@list.nist.gov to be automatically subscribed.
The items in this repository are released in the public domain. See the
LICENSE for details.